1 00:00:01,320 --> 00:00:02,719 Speaker 1: I wanted to pull a catch all. 2 00:00:04,800 --> 00:00:15,400 Speaker 2: Camming play. I really hoped we were done using that 3 00:00:15,680 --> 00:00:21,840 Speaker 2: sound effect. Guys, that was just a horrible series all 4 00:00:21,880 --> 00:00:26,840 Speaker 2: the way around for the Yankees. It was pitiful. It 5 00:00:27,000 --> 00:00:31,320 Speaker 2: was the perfect example of what's wrong with this franchise 6 00:00:31,360 --> 00:00:35,320 Speaker 2: in a lot of ways. Yeah, they came back a 7 00:00:35,360 --> 00:00:40,479 Speaker 2: little bit in the seventh and eighth or seventh and 8 00:00:40,680 --> 00:00:49,040 Speaker 2: ninth against the slop of the Ray's bullpen, but the 9 00:00:49,120 --> 00:00:51,960 Speaker 2: Yankees still feel unwatchable. And I was really hoping I 10 00:00:52,000 --> 00:00:54,200 Speaker 2: wouldn't have to do this this early in the season. 11 00:00:54,200 --> 00:01:00,760 Speaker 2: But it's time for a rint. That hot start of 12 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:03,320 Speaker 2: five to one against the Giants and the Mariners, it 13 00:01:03,320 --> 00:01:06,640 Speaker 2: feels like it happened about six months ago. It feels 14 00:01:06,640 --> 00:01:11,120 Speaker 2: like it happened forever ago. Usually the Yankees wait until 15 00:01:11,160 --> 00:01:15,920 Speaker 2: the summertime to completely mail it in and play like 16 00:01:16,400 --> 00:01:22,440 Speaker 2: this group of joyless automatons. This year, they skipped the 17 00:01:22,480 --> 00:01:28,760 Speaker 2: formalities and went straight to the June swoon two months 18 00:01:28,800 --> 00:01:33,440 Speaker 2: ahead of schedule. Anything that can go wrong with the 19 00:01:33,520 --> 00:01:35,040 Speaker 2: Yankees right now is going wrong. And they hit a 20 00:01:35,080 --> 00:01:38,399 Speaker 2: ball hard, the guy knocks it down and throws him out. 21 00:01:40,400 --> 00:01:42,760 Speaker 2: If the team they're playing attempts to play baseball. The 22 00:01:42,840 --> 00:01:45,360 Speaker 2: Yankees don't have any solution. They can't feel the bunt, 23 00:01:47,000 --> 00:01:51,559 Speaker 2: and the Yankees offensive philosophy that they keep defending year 24 00:01:51,960 --> 00:01:58,320 Speaker 2: after year is an absolute abomination. It is an abomination. 25 00:01:59,840 --> 00:02:07,520 Speaker 2: It is not baseball. It is industrialized boredom. It's an 26 00:02:07,600 --> 00:02:13,320 Speaker 2: assembly line of strikeout, pop out, strikeout, weak, groundout, bad 27 00:02:13,400 --> 00:02:19,360 Speaker 2: situational at bat, occasional to run home run that somehow 28 00:02:19,400 --> 00:02:22,840 Speaker 2: convinces them that the process is working. It doesn't work, 29 00:02:22,919 --> 00:02:25,360 Speaker 2: it won't work, it's never gonna work. This is not 30 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:30,119 Speaker 2: a bad stretch. This is a bad decade. About ten 31 00:02:30,200 --> 00:02:34,760 Speaker 2: years ago, the Yankees stopped valuing hits and batting average. 32 00:02:34,880 --> 00:02:40,959 Speaker 2: They stopped valuing contact and baseball ability. They stopped valuing 33 00:02:40,960 --> 00:02:44,240 Speaker 2: the guy who can shorten up and put the ball 34 00:02:44,320 --> 00:02:47,440 Speaker 2: in play, maybe hit the ball behind a runner to 35 00:02:47,480 --> 00:02:53,320 Speaker 2: keep the ending alive. Instead, they've built their entire offense 36 00:02:54,000 --> 00:03:01,720 Speaker 2: around exit velocity, launch angle and theoretical run expectancy values 37 00:03:01,760 --> 00:03:05,720 Speaker 2: and stuff. It is awful to watch. It is awful 38 00:03:05,800 --> 00:03:14,120 Speaker 2: to watch put the ball in play with authority, hit 39 00:03:14,160 --> 00:03:18,560 Speaker 2: the ball where they ain't. And for the last you know, 40 00:03:18,919 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 2: ten years or so, they've been lucky enough to have 41 00:03:20,919 --> 00:03:22,959 Speaker 2: Aaron Judge in the middle of it. And he's like 42 00:03:23,040 --> 00:03:26,080 Speaker 2: a cheat code, right because he's a modern day Babe Ruth. 43 00:03:26,200 --> 00:03:27,560 Speaker 2: So the Yankees are gonna look at this game and 44 00:03:27,560 --> 00:03:30,480 Speaker 2: say they be lost by one. But the problem is 45 00:03:30,480 --> 00:03:35,240 Speaker 2: when judges and obliterating baseballs, this lineup turns into a 46 00:03:35,240 --> 00:03:38,560 Speaker 2: collection of guys taking enormous hacks and then a slow 47 00:03:38,640 --> 00:03:41,560 Speaker 2: jog back to the dugout after a PopOut or a strikeout. 48 00:03:42,840 --> 00:03:45,840 Speaker 2: That is not a lineup. That is a design flaw. 49 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:49,680 Speaker 2: That is a design flaw and how the team was 50 00:03:49,720 --> 00:03:53,400 Speaker 2: constructed by Brian Cashman and his army of yes men. 51 00:03:55,520 --> 00:03:58,839 Speaker 2: And what makes it worse is that the mistakes are obvious. 52 00:03:59,120 --> 00:04:04,040 Speaker 2: They are obvious. You finally get rid of the deadweight 53 00:04:04,120 --> 00:04:08,040 Speaker 2: of the Josh Donaldson contract, you get rid of dj Lemayhew, 54 00:04:08,200 --> 00:04:11,080 Speaker 2: and you think, maybe they've learned something. Let's not get 55 00:04:11,120 --> 00:04:15,800 Speaker 2: aging veterans who can't hit anymore. Maybe they understand we 56 00:04:15,840 --> 00:04:18,359 Speaker 2: need to get younger and more athletic, more adaptable to 57 00:04:18,360 --> 00:04:21,200 Speaker 2: the modern game. Instead they go and get Ryan McMahon, 58 00:04:21,320 --> 00:04:23,479 Speaker 2: who couldn't hit the ground if he fell out of 59 00:04:23,480 --> 00:04:29,040 Speaker 2: a fucking tree. This is not bad luck. This is 60 00:04:29,480 --> 00:04:34,279 Speaker 2: stubbornness by the Yankees. I gotta pull up their dashboard 61 00:04:34,279 --> 00:04:37,880 Speaker 2: real quick. I gotta show you something. They are hitting 62 00:04:37,920 --> 00:04:39,720 Speaker 2: two to oh two as a team, and that's only 63 00:04:39,760 --> 00:04:42,200 Speaker 2: because Judge and Rice had hits in the ninth inning. 64 00:04:44,320 --> 00:04:46,440 Speaker 2: They were hitting one ninety nine as late as the 65 00:04:46,480 --> 00:04:52,600 Speaker 2: eighth inning as a team. As a team, they're in 66 00:04:52,720 --> 00:04:54,800 Speaker 2: two o two. That's twenty eighth in Major League Baseball. 67 00:04:54,800 --> 00:04:57,200 Speaker 2: There's only thirty teams, folks. The Yankees have a three 68 00:04:57,240 --> 00:05:01,440 Speaker 2: hundred million dollars pay roll. They're twenty fifth in ops 69 00:05:01,760 --> 00:05:05,360 Speaker 2: at six fifty three. They're nineteenth in runs with fifty nine. 70 00:05:05,920 --> 00:05:09,360 Speaker 2: They've got a three zero eight on base percentage. There 71 00:05:09,520 --> 00:05:12,560 Speaker 2: was a time when the lowest on base percentage in 72 00:05:12,600 --> 00:05:17,000 Speaker 2: the Yankees lineup was around three hundred in my lifetime. 73 00:05:17,200 --> 00:05:20,520 Speaker 2: Can we please try and get back to that. Aaron 74 00:05:20,600 --> 00:05:24,040 Speaker 2: Judge is fifth on the team and average at two eighteen. 75 00:05:26,960 --> 00:05:35,440 Speaker 2: That is an abomination, an abomination. The bullpen is a 76 00:05:35,480 --> 00:05:39,799 Speaker 2: disaster too. Let's be honest. Spare me the pitching lab bullshit. 77 00:05:40,800 --> 00:05:43,799 Speaker 2: I don't care about the horizontal break on your sweeper 78 00:05:44,120 --> 00:05:48,640 Speaker 2: or the induced vertical break on your whatever. Can you 79 00:05:48,720 --> 00:05:51,880 Speaker 2: get an out when the game is on the line. 80 00:05:52,440 --> 00:05:54,240 Speaker 2: Can you get an out when you got a speedy 81 00:05:54,320 --> 00:05:58,760 Speaker 2: runner on the bases? The Yankees have this bullpen that's 82 00:05:59,080 --> 00:06:03,120 Speaker 2: it's like a a bullpen full of lab experiments, but 83 00:06:03,240 --> 00:06:08,159 Speaker 2: not a set of bollocks on one of them, and 84 00:06:08,200 --> 00:06:10,359 Speaker 2: you pile on the other. Nonsense. We have to watch 85 00:06:10,640 --> 00:06:15,640 Speaker 2: Ben Rice accidentally challenged a pitch right down the middle today. 86 00:06:16,960 --> 00:06:19,640 Speaker 2: You shouldn't be able to like guys adjust their helmet. 87 00:06:19,640 --> 00:06:21,840 Speaker 2: There should be a verbal thing to touch your head 88 00:06:21,960 --> 00:06:25,839 Speaker 2: and say, I challenge, I challenge how hard is that? 89 00:06:29,040 --> 00:06:35,720 Speaker 2: Last night, Jazz Chisnem admitted to a television reporter when 90 00:06:35,800 --> 00:06:38,799 Speaker 2: he knew the camera was running and he knew people 91 00:06:38,800 --> 00:06:41,400 Speaker 2: were listening, that he didn't know the rules of baseball. 92 00:06:44,080 --> 00:06:46,679 Speaker 2: The second I heard that, I had the same thought 93 00:06:46,720 --> 00:06:49,360 Speaker 2: that I'm sure all of you rational Yankees fans had, 94 00:06:49,839 --> 00:06:53,679 Speaker 2: which is he's not a serious player. That's not something 95 00:06:53,720 --> 00:06:58,800 Speaker 2: serious players say loud in public, not if you want 96 00:06:58,839 --> 00:07:02,240 Speaker 2: to be taken seriously, not if you want superstar money. 97 00:07:02,360 --> 00:07:05,760 Speaker 2: Everyone knew bringing back Trent Grisham was a bad idea. 98 00:07:07,360 --> 00:07:11,040 Speaker 2: The one area where the Yankees actually had some death 99 00:07:11,960 --> 00:07:15,680 Speaker 2: the outfield. They got Jason Domingez. You got Spencer Jones. 100 00:07:17,680 --> 00:07:20,520 Speaker 2: They had to hand out twenty two million to another 101 00:07:20,640 --> 00:07:24,640 Speaker 2: all or nothing bad because apparently this organization is allergic 102 00:07:25,320 --> 00:07:28,640 Speaker 2: to guys who can make contact and get on base. 103 00:07:29,760 --> 00:07:35,880 Speaker 2: And Grisham has this unbelievably irritating habit of standing there 104 00:07:35,920 --> 00:07:39,600 Speaker 2: and admiring a routine flyball like he's Barry Bonds and 105 00:07:39,640 --> 00:07:42,600 Speaker 2: he just hit one in the second deck. Trent, that 106 00:07:42,720 --> 00:07:46,040 Speaker 2: is a three hundred and fifty foot can of corn 107 00:07:46,240 --> 00:07:49,600 Speaker 2: to center field. Stop posing for photographs like you're gonna 108 00:07:49,640 --> 00:07:55,600 Speaker 2: be on the weedies box. It will never happen. This 109 00:07:55,680 --> 00:07:59,360 Speaker 2: team with the pop ups. How many freaking pop ups 110 00:07:59,360 --> 00:08:02,840 Speaker 2: do we need to hit huge situations. I don't think 111 00:08:02,880 --> 00:08:04,800 Speaker 2: I've seen this many pop ups from a team in 112 00:08:04,800 --> 00:08:07,480 Speaker 2: my thirty nine years of watching baseball. It is bad. 113 00:08:08,640 --> 00:08:13,040 Speaker 2: It is that bad. A pop up is the most 114 00:08:13,040 --> 00:08:16,240 Speaker 2: pathetic out in the sport, aside from a strikeout. Doesn't 115 00:08:16,240 --> 00:08:19,640 Speaker 2: move a runner, doesn't test the defense at all, It 116 00:08:19,640 --> 00:08:22,119 Speaker 2: doesn't create any kind of pressure. It just goes straight 117 00:08:22,200 --> 00:08:24,040 Speaker 2: up in the air and you half jogged the first 118 00:08:24,320 --> 00:08:29,880 Speaker 2: the most boring play result in baseball, and that's one 119 00:08:29,880 --> 00:08:32,080 Speaker 2: of my major qualms. This is the entertainment business. And 120 00:08:32,160 --> 00:08:35,240 Speaker 2: this team has been so boring to watch this year, 121 00:08:35,760 --> 00:08:39,760 Speaker 2: just boring. We have a team full of Matt Noakes's 122 00:08:40,240 --> 00:08:45,920 Speaker 2: and Tyler Wade's and Clint Frazier's. The Yankees are a 123 00:08:45,960 --> 00:08:51,560 Speaker 2: team that has tried to outsmart baseball instead of learning 124 00:08:51,800 --> 00:08:59,320 Speaker 2: how to play it. Rantal all right, here's Eddie and 125 00:08:59,360 --> 00:09:04,080 Speaker 2: Trinidaddy says, the last four years of Yankees baseball has 126 00:09:04,120 --> 00:09:06,760 Speaker 2: been a feast or famine. Offense is longer than that, Eddie, 127 00:09:07,720 --> 00:09:11,600 Speaker 2: it's longer than that. Obie Brick says, is the pop 128 00:09:11,640 --> 00:09:17,800 Speaker 2: out the Yankees new strikeout. Katie Herring says, get Ryan 129 00:09:17,880 --> 00:09:28,800 Speaker 2: McMahon off the team. He has to go anyway. Aaron 130 00:09:28,880 --> 00:09:31,640 Speaker 2: Judge went deep today. Ben Rice had a couple of hits. 131 00:09:32,520 --> 00:09:36,080 Speaker 2: That's about the extent of it. Cam Schlitzler threw the ball. Okay, 132 00:09:36,120 --> 00:09:37,800 Speaker 2: he got off to a tough start. I'll break him 133 00:09:37,840 --> 00:09:41,400 Speaker 2: down in more detail in a minute. But the Yankees 134 00:09:41,440 --> 00:09:43,240 Speaker 2: lost five to four. But it felt like a game. 135 00:09:43,400 --> 00:09:45,160 Speaker 2: Am I wrong in thinking that this didn't feel like 136 00:09:45,200 --> 00:09:47,080 Speaker 2: a one run game? It felt like a ten to 137 00:09:47,120 --> 00:09:49,400 Speaker 2: one game. That's the kind of energy the Yankees put 138 00:09:49,440 --> 00:09:54,760 Speaker 2: out there today, and they got swept by a team 139 00:09:55,160 --> 00:09:58,640 Speaker 2: that has no business sweeping them. A team with about 140 00:09:58,679 --> 00:10:02,000 Speaker 2: a third is big a payroll as them. They should 141 00:10:02,000 --> 00:10:05,320 Speaker 2: be embarrassed. I hope that flight back to New York 142 00:10:05,679 --> 00:10:09,559 Speaker 2: is as silent as a cemetery. I hope that it 143 00:10:09,640 --> 00:10:11,840 Speaker 2: is just I don't want to hear a pin drop 144 00:10:12,200 --> 00:10:15,280 Speaker 2: if I'm the manager, or and actually, you know what, Booner, 145 00:10:15,320 --> 00:10:17,480 Speaker 2: probably play some music, Let's play some cards, Let's have 146 00:10:17,520 --> 00:10:26,360 Speaker 2: some fun. Absolute abomination of a team. Oh for four 147 00:10:26,400 --> 00:10:29,360 Speaker 2: for Grisham, two for four for Ben Rice, one for 148 00:10:29,400 --> 00:10:32,040 Speaker 2: three for Judge with a home run, Bellinger one for four, 149 00:10:32,600 --> 00:10:35,520 Speaker 2: Jazz one for four, gritchick o for two, Stanton oh 150 00:10:35,600 --> 00:10:39,000 Speaker 2: for one, did have an RBI productive out, Rosario had 151 00:10:39,000 --> 00:10:41,839 Speaker 2: a base knock and he's only a bat. Iscarra oh 152 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:44,600 Speaker 2: for two, wells pinch hit oh for one, McMahon one 153 00:10:44,640 --> 00:10:47,480 Speaker 2: for four. Hey, hey, he's got the average over one hundred. 154 00:10:47,800 --> 00:10:56,840 Speaker 2: How about that Cavaliro oh for three. I mean, it's 155 00:10:56,880 --> 00:11:00,320 Speaker 2: just a brutal performance in so many ways for this 156 00:11:00,440 --> 00:11:06,240 Speaker 2: Yankees team. They got seven hits, doubles by Chisholm, Rice 157 00:11:06,320 --> 00:11:10,240 Speaker 2: and Rosario, RBIs by Bellinger, Judge and Stanton. I'll tell 158 00:11:10,280 --> 00:11:15,000 Speaker 2: you what, Chandler Simpson is an absolute pain in the ass. 159 00:11:15,480 --> 00:11:17,880 Speaker 2: That guy. I'm glad we're done with him for at 160 00:11:17,960 --> 00:11:21,000 Speaker 2: least a few weeks. That guy is annoying as a player. 161 00:11:21,040 --> 00:11:24,839 Speaker 2: When do we play Tampa Bay again? Doesn't look like 162 00:11:24,880 --> 00:11:28,400 Speaker 2: we played them again until oh man, it's gonna be 163 00:11:28,400 --> 00:11:36,920 Speaker 2: a while July. By then, he'll probably have fifty stolen bases. Anyway, 164 00:11:37,280 --> 00:11:48,280 Speaker 2: Yankees lose this one. Age I says they pulled grounders 165 00:11:48,320 --> 00:11:50,679 Speaker 2: on outside pitches. Oh my god, that's that's almost as 166 00:11:50,679 --> 00:11:53,000 Speaker 2: frustrating as the pop ups. That's baseball one oh one. 167 00:11:53,040 --> 00:11:54,720 Speaker 2: And I agree with you. They did that a lot. 168 00:11:55,400 --> 00:11:59,200 Speaker 2: Got a couple of super chats here. J x V says, 169 00:11:59,360 --> 00:12:03,600 Speaker 2: our bullpen horrible. I can't disagree with you there. Franklin says, 170 00:12:03,640 --> 00:12:06,800 Speaker 2: hopefully the disgusting offense of this team doesn't demoralize the 171 00:12:06,840 --> 00:12:08,880 Speaker 2: pitching staft, since that's the only reason they have been winning. 172 00:12:09,760 --> 00:12:12,679 Speaker 2: And one of a kind says any more that says 173 00:12:12,720 --> 00:12:15,160 Speaker 2: batting average doesn't matter, doesn't know ball. I'm tired of 174 00:12:15,200 --> 00:12:18,600 Speaker 2: hearing that stupid argument. I appreciate it. 175 00:12:21,160 --> 00:12:21,280 Speaker 1: All. 176 00:12:21,480 --> 00:12:25,599 Speaker 2: Let's talk about Cam Schleutler, and then we get a 177 00:12:25,679 --> 00:12:29,280 Speaker 2: lot of angry voicemails. Got a lot of angry voicemails here, 178 00:12:29,920 --> 00:12:33,520 Speaker 2: So it was not his best start. Five innings and 179 00:12:33,559 --> 00:12:36,400 Speaker 2: seven hits and three runs, but he did have eighteen 180 00:12:36,440 --> 00:12:38,520 Speaker 2: swings and misses, so the stuff was there. That's a 181 00:12:38,559 --> 00:12:41,440 Speaker 2: ton for five innings eight strikeouts. He did walk his 182 00:12:41,440 --> 00:12:44,400 Speaker 2: first hitter of the year, so he's got now thirty 183 00:12:44,440 --> 00:12:47,560 Speaker 2: strikeouts and one walks. That's pretty good ratio. You'll take that. 184 00:12:48,080 --> 00:12:51,240 Speaker 2: Despite the walk, his strike rate was still seventy two 185 00:12:51,280 --> 00:12:53,480 Speaker 2: percent today, so he was pounding the zone. He had 186 00:12:53,520 --> 00:12:56,840 Speaker 2: fifteen first pitch strikes sixty one strikes on eighty five pitches, 187 00:12:57,679 --> 00:13:01,720 Speaker 2: so he was pounding this but still the game score 188 00:13:01,800 --> 00:13:03,720 Speaker 2: under fifty, which is like the starting point, so it 189 00:13:03,800 --> 00:13:07,240 Speaker 2: was technically a blow average start, but I thought the 190 00:13:07,240 --> 00:13:09,680 Speaker 2: stuff was really good. Through four starts two point four 191 00:13:09,679 --> 00:13:12,800 Speaker 2: to nine, ERA has not allowed a home run yet, 192 00:13:13,520 --> 00:13:17,960 Speaker 2: So despite the loss, I am not getting off of 193 00:13:18,040 --> 00:13:20,079 Speaker 2: the Cam Schlittler train. I still think he's going to 194 00:13:20,120 --> 00:13:25,320 Speaker 2: be a stud. Shlid happens, man schlid happens. So the 195 00:13:25,400 --> 00:13:30,280 Speaker 2: Yankees dropped three in a row in Tampa, and you 196 00:13:30,280 --> 00:13:33,080 Speaker 2: know they had different studs every single game. That were 197 00:13:33,080 --> 00:13:35,640 Speaker 2: beating us. You know, whether it's Taylor Walls yesterday who's 198 00:13:35,679 --> 00:13:37,480 Speaker 2: not a good player except when he plays the Yankees, 199 00:13:37,920 --> 00:13:41,000 Speaker 2: Edwin Diaz on Friday night going deep, and then Chandler 200 00:13:41,040 --> 00:13:43,080 Speaker 2: Simpson today who was a pest the entire series, but 201 00:13:43,120 --> 00:13:45,280 Speaker 2: today his best game. He went three for four. Drew 202 00:13:45,320 --> 00:13:48,400 Speaker 2: Rasmussen gets to win, he's one to zero. Schlittler gets 203 00:13:48,400 --> 00:13:49,840 Speaker 2: the loss. He's two and one with a two point 204 00:13:49,920 --> 00:13:53,720 Speaker 2: four to nine. Anglert the save despite having a ten 205 00:13:53,800 --> 00:13:59,160 Speaker 2: point five seven ERA, And just like that, the Yankees 206 00:13:59,200 --> 00:14:02,319 Speaker 2: are in a first plays tie with the Tampa Ray 207 00:14:02,440 --> 00:14:05,960 Speaker 2: or Tampa Bay Rays. But you know that the Rays, 208 00:14:06,000 --> 00:14:08,559 Speaker 2: with their sweep of the Yankees, now have the advantage 209 00:14:08,600 --> 00:14:10,200 Speaker 2: should it somehow end up like that at the end 210 00:14:10,200 --> 00:14:11,760 Speaker 2: of the season. But also the oiols eight and seven, 211 00:14:11,800 --> 00:14:14,640 Speaker 2: they've pulled into a tie at the top. So the 212 00:14:14,679 --> 00:14:17,080 Speaker 2: Yankees had a chance to run away and hide after 213 00:14:17,120 --> 00:14:19,320 Speaker 2: that eight and two start if they had just played well, 214 00:14:19,680 --> 00:14:22,800 Speaker 2: just gotten the bats going. But they have not gotten 215 00:14:22,800 --> 00:14:26,720 Speaker 2: it going. And now the Yankees have scored just sixty 216 00:14:26,720 --> 00:14:30,560 Speaker 2: five runs. They've scored less runs than the Rays. They've 217 00:14:30,560 --> 00:14:32,640 Speaker 2: scored more runs than the Blue Jays and the Red Sox. 218 00:14:32,680 --> 00:14:35,120 Speaker 2: But the Blue Jays six and eight, Red Sox five 219 00:14:35,160 --> 00:14:38,720 Speaker 2: and nine. Next three games, they got Yusei Kakuchi, who's 220 00:14:38,720 --> 00:14:40,400 Speaker 2: own two with a six point seventy five, so he'll 221 00:14:40,440 --> 00:14:44,880 Speaker 2: probably throw seven shutout innings. Let me turn this back 222 00:14:44,880 --> 00:14:47,760 Speaker 2: on so I can go back and look at the 223 00:14:47,800 --> 00:14:50,520 Speaker 2: next game that they got. Because I didn't leave it 224 00:14:50,600 --> 00:14:55,480 Speaker 2: up there long enough, I'll back it up here. So anyway, 225 00:14:55,600 --> 00:15:00,640 Speaker 2: f who gives a shit? Whatever, tough off day for 226 00:15:00,680 --> 00:15:05,160 Speaker 2: the Yankees. So we got Ryan Weathers versus Reed debtmeers 227 00:15:05,200 --> 00:15:09,040 Speaker 2: on Tuesday than Luis Heal versus TBD in Game three 228 00:15:09,440 --> 00:15:12,240 Speaker 2: and then Game four Max Freed is a four game set. 229 00:15:12,760 --> 00:15:16,760 Speaker 2: So far this season, the Yankees have scored one more 230 00:15:16,840 --> 00:15:20,000 Speaker 2: run than the Angels, sixty five to sixty four. They've 231 00:15:20,040 --> 00:15:23,840 Speaker 2: allowed less runs. Angels have allowed seventy one runs. Angels 232 00:15:23,840 --> 00:15:27,280 Speaker 2: have this minus seven run differential. Angels have a two 233 00:15:27,280 --> 00:15:29,360 Speaker 2: to eleven batting average, which is higher than the Yankees 234 00:15:29,400 --> 00:15:31,560 Speaker 2: at two two. They have a three twenty five on 235 00:15:31,640 --> 00:15:33,800 Speaker 2: base percentage, which beats the Yankees at three to eight. 236 00:15:34,560 --> 00:15:36,360 Speaker 2: So pretty much the only place where the Yankees have 237 00:15:36,360 --> 00:15:39,320 Speaker 2: done better is in the pitching Yankees two point seven 238 00:15:39,320 --> 00:15:44,360 Speaker 2: to eight era and then yeah, they scored one more run. 239 00:15:44,760 --> 00:15:47,840 Speaker 2: But the pitching has been the difference for the Yankees. 240 00:15:47,920 --> 00:15:50,960 Speaker 2: If it wasn't for the Yankees outstanding starting pitching, they 241 00:15:50,960 --> 00:15:53,600 Speaker 2: would be up shit creek. All right, quick word from 242 00:15:53,720 --> 00:15:55,960 Speaker 2: the guys at Seakeek, and then we've got I don't know, 243 00:15:56,000 --> 00:15:58,640 Speaker 2: half a dozen emails of angry Yankees fans. It's worth 244 00:15:58,680 --> 00:16:00,760 Speaker 2: sticking around for trust me. 245 00:16:01,280 --> 00:16:04,840 Speaker 3: With over thirty five million downloads, what is the number 246 00:16:04,920 --> 00:16:07,120 Speaker 3: one rated ticketing app, Todd Father. 247 00:16:07,040 --> 00:16:09,640 Speaker 4: It's simple, man, see Geek. As we know, man, they 248 00:16:09,640 --> 00:16:12,120 Speaker 4: have a lot of things that helps you out along 249 00:16:12,160 --> 00:16:14,640 Speaker 4: the way. They have green dots meaning good and red 250 00:16:14,640 --> 00:16:16,480 Speaker 4: dots meaning bad, and it's on a scale of one 251 00:16:16,520 --> 00:16:19,680 Speaker 4: to ten, showing you, Scott, how good the seats are. 252 00:16:19,720 --> 00:16:21,800 Speaker 4: And sometimes you want sometimes you want to sit in 253 00:16:21,800 --> 00:16:23,720 Speaker 4: the nosebleedz theer's sometimes you want to sit in really 254 00:16:23,720 --> 00:16:25,160 Speaker 4: good seats and Scott, you. 255 00:16:25,120 --> 00:16:26,240 Speaker 1: Know the code right, yeah I do. 256 00:16:26,320 --> 00:16:28,200 Speaker 3: And also I know that you always like a good deal. 257 00:16:28,360 --> 00:16:30,800 Speaker 3: Oh so Seekeek helps you out all the time with that. 258 00:16:30,840 --> 00:16:34,360 Speaker 3: They also help you out with the exclusive FT code, 259 00:16:34,520 --> 00:16:37,280 Speaker 3: which is Territory ten for ten percent off your next 260 00:16:37,320 --> 00:16:40,320 Speaker 3: set of tickets at Sea Geek. That's ten percent off 261 00:16:40,560 --> 00:16:43,480 Speaker 3: any tickets with promo code t E R R I 262 00:16:44,080 --> 00:16:46,440 Speaker 3: R Y one zero. Make sure you click the link 263 00:16:46,480 --> 00:16:48,600 Speaker 3: in the description to download the app and you can 264 00:16:48,600 --> 00:16:50,840 Speaker 3: have that code automatically added to your account so that 265 00:16:50,880 --> 00:16:54,000 Speaker 3: you can use it later. There are regular season MLB 266 00:16:54,120 --> 00:16:57,240 Speaker 3: games going on right now. There are hot tickets across 267 00:16:57,360 --> 00:16:59,640 Speaker 3: the country, so it makes sure you go to Sea Geek. 268 00:17:00,040 --> 00:17:01,120 Speaker 3: They will take care of you. 269 00:17:05,640 --> 00:17:09,720 Speaker 2: All right. You got a couple of super chats here. 270 00:17:10,560 --> 00:17:14,200 Speaker 2: David says, how do the Yankees keep making journeyman pitchers 271 00:17:14,240 --> 00:17:18,560 Speaker 2: look like cy young candidates. It's their hitting style, right. 272 00:17:18,640 --> 00:17:20,560 Speaker 2: You try and hit home runs off of major league 273 00:17:20,560 --> 00:17:25,520 Speaker 2: pitchers every single time, it's not gonna work. Doug Rowse 274 00:17:25,520 --> 00:17:28,280 Speaker 2: says it's time to call up the Martian Grisham to 275 00:17:28,359 --> 00:17:32,280 Speaker 2: the seldom used fourth outfielder, and Gritchick would hardly say, 276 00:17:32,800 --> 00:17:34,920 Speaker 2: we knew you, but Hardy is still way too much. 277 00:17:35,000 --> 00:17:35,439 Speaker 2: I like it. 278 00:17:36,040 --> 00:17:36,600 Speaker 1: Get rid of. 279 00:17:36,560 --> 00:17:42,000 Speaker 2: Them, all right. We got some voicemails here. I think 280 00:17:42,040 --> 00:17:44,200 Speaker 2: this one is about Austin Wells. 281 00:17:44,800 --> 00:17:48,720 Speaker 5: Austin Wells sucks. 282 00:17:48,840 --> 00:17:52,119 Speaker 2: And that's it. Wells pinch it. Today's over one by 283 00:17:52,160 --> 00:17:54,879 Speaker 2: hitting one fifty four on the season. Thankfully we didn't 284 00:17:54,920 --> 00:17:57,120 Speaker 2: have to watch him throw three or four balls into 285 00:17:57,160 --> 00:18:00,280 Speaker 2: the outfield today at least. But yeah, Austin well off 286 00:18:00,280 --> 00:18:04,040 Speaker 2: to a really tough start in the twenty twenty sixth season. 287 00:18:04,240 --> 00:18:06,800 Speaker 2: Here's Brian, dude. 288 00:18:06,960 --> 00:18:09,679 Speaker 1: It is going to take every little bit of me 289 00:18:09,760 --> 00:18:13,440 Speaker 1: not to start swearing and custom at this, which I won't. 290 00:18:13,520 --> 00:18:19,040 Speaker 1: But it is unbelievable. These guys can't field a bunt. 291 00:18:19,320 --> 00:18:23,200 Speaker 1: We look like the Czech Little League team versus Japan, 292 00:18:23,320 --> 00:18:26,720 Speaker 1: who's like well rounded and knows how to fundamentally play baseball. 293 00:18:27,160 --> 00:18:30,240 Speaker 1: We have no clue what we're doing out there. It's 294 00:18:30,280 --> 00:18:32,720 Speaker 1: like it's either like three or four bunths. These guys 295 00:18:32,720 --> 00:18:35,840 Speaker 1: have laid down and we're not even close to getting 296 00:18:36,000 --> 00:18:39,040 Speaker 1: in out. Not the force out at home or excuse me, 297 00:18:39,119 --> 00:18:42,600 Speaker 1: not the out at home or force out at first nothing, 298 00:18:43,160 --> 00:18:46,520 Speaker 1: We're nowhere near getting it out. I would just bunt 299 00:18:46,640 --> 00:18:50,560 Speaker 1: us to death. We look lost on fielding a bunch. 300 00:18:51,040 --> 00:18:55,080 Speaker 1: It is brutal. I've never seen a team more bad 301 00:18:55,240 --> 00:19:00,240 Speaker 1: like with worse fundamentals. It is brutal to watch hard 302 00:19:00,280 --> 00:19:04,440 Speaker 1: to see a team that has the highest payroll in 303 00:19:04,480 --> 00:19:07,639 Speaker 1: the Yankees' history, I believe, and this is this is 304 00:19:07,640 --> 00:19:09,840 Speaker 1: the product they put out there. They can't field the 305 00:19:09,840 --> 00:19:11,760 Speaker 1: ground ball, they don't know what base that throws you. 306 00:19:11,840 --> 00:19:16,440 Speaker 1: No one's covering first multiple times. It is so bad. 307 00:19:16,440 --> 00:19:19,240 Speaker 1: Please give me the upside to this, Well. 308 00:19:19,119 --> 00:19:21,919 Speaker 2: The upside is if it gets much worse, eventually the 309 00:19:22,000 --> 00:19:25,000 Speaker 2: manager is going to be out of here. I mean, 310 00:19:25,040 --> 00:19:29,200 Speaker 2: you just can't continue to play like this. It's that 311 00:19:29,280 --> 00:19:33,840 Speaker 2: type of thing, the failure to execute on baseball plays 312 00:19:34,720 --> 00:19:40,040 Speaker 2: that is a product of the manager not getting everybody 313 00:19:40,080 --> 00:19:45,240 Speaker 2: on board with winning baseball. You know, And I don't 314 00:19:45,240 --> 00:19:48,119 Speaker 2: even you know, Ryan McMahon, I don't even know what 315 00:19:48,160 --> 00:19:50,800 Speaker 2: to say. I don't even want McMahon dfaide. I want 316 00:19:50,880 --> 00:19:55,320 Speaker 2: him arrested hitting one fourteen or the three seventy six 317 00:19:55,440 --> 00:19:57,840 Speaker 2: OPS that's not his own base percentage, that's his OPS. 318 00:19:57,840 --> 00:20:01,399 Speaker 2: On base plus slugging is three seventy six. I am 319 00:20:01,440 --> 00:20:03,760 Speaker 2: confident a lot of you could do that. I am 320 00:20:03,760 --> 00:20:06,080 Speaker 2: confident a lot of the people listening could have a 321 00:20:06,119 --> 00:20:09,919 Speaker 2: three seventy six OPS in ten games in the major leagues, 322 00:20:10,440 --> 00:20:12,560 Speaker 2: because you can almost do it accidentally by hitting some 323 00:20:12,680 --> 00:20:14,359 Speaker 2: numbers or drawing a walk. 324 00:20:15,400 --> 00:20:16,359 Speaker 1: He has done none of that. 325 00:20:19,480 --> 00:20:23,840 Speaker 5: Here's Willie is willly you know, Simpson is not a 326 00:20:23,880 --> 00:20:27,000 Speaker 5: good out there and they're working with him on that. 327 00:20:27,560 --> 00:20:30,679 Speaker 5: But is he's hitting in a hidden over three hundred 328 00:20:31,400 --> 00:20:32,520 Speaker 5: Hell no. 329 00:20:33,920 --> 00:20:44,120 Speaker 2: Willie again a succinct point. Let's see what Domingez has 330 00:20:44,240 --> 00:20:48,159 Speaker 2: done recently. Pull up his stats here. So two for 331 00:20:48,280 --> 00:20:52,880 Speaker 2: four today against the Bulls, hitting three point fifty four 332 00:20:53,000 --> 00:20:55,480 Speaker 2: with a nine to ninety six OPS so far in TRIPA, 333 00:20:55,600 --> 00:20:58,280 Speaker 2: he's got seven stolen bases. It's on pace for fifty 334 00:20:58,320 --> 00:21:03,480 Speaker 2: five stolen bases sixteen home runs. I you know, I 335 00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:05,080 Speaker 2: would like to see him in the in the lineup 336 00:21:05,080 --> 00:21:09,080 Speaker 2: in left field, and I'd like to see Bellinger in centerfield, 337 00:21:10,160 --> 00:21:13,720 Speaker 2: and then Grisham on the bench. I agree with Doug Row, 338 00:21:13,800 --> 00:21:17,520 Speaker 2: who wants to make him the you know, fourth outfielder 339 00:21:17,720 --> 00:21:22,000 Speaker 2: and and start Domingez. One hundred percent agree, one hundred 340 00:21:22,000 --> 00:21:22,480 Speaker 2: percent agree. 341 00:21:22,480 --> 00:21:25,480 Speaker 1: Here's Eddie, Hey, Derek Eddie. 342 00:21:25,960 --> 00:21:29,320 Speaker 5: I was looking online today and I saw that the 343 00:21:29,400 --> 00:21:34,080 Speaker 5: Yankees are averaging four runs per game, which is pretty 344 00:21:34,080 --> 00:21:37,000 Speaker 5: surprised at considering that our seven, eight, nine and one 345 00:21:37,080 --> 00:21:43,919 Speaker 5: bodies are not doing anything well. Mcwan Cavallero Grisham and 346 00:21:44,000 --> 00:21:46,800 Speaker 5: today with a Scolari's turn, They're not doing anything. 347 00:21:47,720 --> 00:21:49,320 Speaker 1: I mean, we can't. 348 00:21:49,359 --> 00:21:52,400 Speaker 5: We have to get something done because two of these 349 00:21:52,400 --> 00:21:54,800 Speaker 5: guys on the left side of the infield, which is 350 00:21:54,840 --> 00:21:58,040 Speaker 5: atocious I shot stoping third basins, are in hitting. They're 351 00:21:58,040 --> 00:22:04,080 Speaker 5: not doing anything. I believe that not firing someone hitting 352 00:22:04,080 --> 00:22:07,280 Speaker 5: and swucked or something is not gonna do anything. Because 353 00:22:07,320 --> 00:22:09,840 Speaker 5: this has been the Yankee philosophy for the last couple 354 00:22:09,840 --> 00:22:12,960 Speaker 5: of years. This team has been feast of family. 355 00:22:14,400 --> 00:22:16,280 Speaker 2: Yeah, I agree with you. It's been longer than a 356 00:22:16,280 --> 00:22:18,439 Speaker 2: couple of years, though, it's been probably a decade. I 357 00:22:18,480 --> 00:22:21,040 Speaker 2: remember Luke Voight showing up to spring training one year 358 00:22:21,640 --> 00:22:24,760 Speaker 2: and saying, batting average? Does anybody care about that? And 359 00:22:24,760 --> 00:22:26,520 Speaker 2: I tell this story every year when the Yankees are 360 00:22:26,520 --> 00:22:29,080 Speaker 2: going through their June swoon. I had to pull it 361 00:22:29,119 --> 00:22:33,479 Speaker 2: out of the mental rollodecks about two months early. Batting 362 00:22:33,480 --> 00:22:36,040 Speaker 2: average does that matter? Does getting hits matter? 363 00:22:36,880 --> 00:22:37,480 Speaker 1: Of course? Not? 364 00:22:38,440 --> 00:22:47,480 Speaker 2: Of course not. Come on, guys, hey. 365 00:22:47,400 --> 00:22:52,760 Speaker 1: Derek, I see Austin Wells is on the bench today 366 00:22:52,840 --> 00:22:56,520 Speaker 1: after hitting a home run yesterday. What the heck is 367 00:22:56,560 --> 00:22:58,400 Speaker 1: going on? What are we doing here? 368 00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:00,000 Speaker 2: Honestly, no problem with that. 369 00:23:00,200 --> 00:23:01,720 Speaker 5: At all Austen. 370 00:23:01,960 --> 00:23:05,720 Speaker 2: Well, alright, guys, I'll see you next time.